Publicación:
Morphology of ejecta features from the impact on asteroid Dimorphos

Unidades organizativas

Número de la revista

Resumen

Hypervelocity impacts play a significant role in the evolution of asteroids, causing material to be ejected and partially reaccreted. However, the dynamics and evolution of ejected material in a binary asteroid system have never been observed directly. Observations of Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) impact on asteroid Dimorphos have revealed features on a scale of thousands of kilometers, including curved ejecta streams and a tail bifurcation originating from the Didymos system. Here we show that these features result naturally from the dynamical interaction of the ejecta with the binary system and solar radiation pressure. These mechanisms may be used to constrain the orbit of a secondary body, or to investigate the binary nature of an asteroid. Also, they may reveal breakup or fission events in active asteroids, and help determine the asteroid’s properties following an impact event. In the case of DART, our findings suggest that Dimorphos is a very weak, rubble-pile asteroid, with an ejecta mass estimated to be in the range of (1.1-5.5)×107 kg.

Descripción

Source data are provided with this paper. All raw HST data associated with this Article are archived and are publicly available at the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (https://mast.stsci.edu/search/ui/#/hst/results?proposal_id=16674) hosted by the Space Telescope Science Institute. The numerical simulation data, synthetic images, masks, and labels generated in this study have been deposited in the Zenodo database and are publicly available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14630436. Source data are provided with this paper.

Palabras clave

Aerospace engineering, Asteroids, Comets, Kuiper belt, Astronomy and astrophysics, Rings and moons

Citación

Nature Communications 16: 1601

Colecciones